Remembering For The Future I East Lansing t is 55 years after the end of World War II and the defeat of Nazi Germany. It is 55 years after the liberation of the camps. Although news of the Nazi destruction of the Jews was available during the war — the Allies issued a public declaration in December 1942 — the newsreels at liberation [were what] first made the news real and imprinted the horror on the American mind. The world today is different than 55 years ago. A once divided Germany is reunited. The Soviet Union, triumphant after the war, no longer exists. Europe has lost its primacy in a post-colonial world. Europe itself is increasingly unit- ed, although deep questions of national identity and autonomy remain. The world is more closely linked — new communications erase distance and boundaries and bring the news in real rime. And yet, even in a new, more tight- ly linked and rapidly changing world, Kenneth Waltzer is director of the Cen- ter for Integrative Studies in Arts and Humanities and a professor in James Madison College at Michigan State University. He delivered a longer version of these remarks at the State of Michi- gan Holocaust Commemoration, held May 2 at the State Capitol in Lansing. and, more recently, hidden children, by survivors, who were silenced by the Holocaust past does not pass. The have participated in a remarkable social American incomprehension and by the Old World ceases to exist, but the movement of oral memory to inform us burdens of making new lives in a new Holocaust, instead of receding, looms about the Holocaust. land. larger. The Holocaust and Auschwitz In more recent decades, however, the National debates throughout do not represent unreason or madness. Holocaust has moved from the margins Europe focus on how the Holocaust Auschwitz was not another planet. to the mainstream of America_n con- should enter into national history and The Holocaust evolved out of memory and into Europe's self- • a broader racial project for understanding. News about the remaking Europe and Holocaust appears regularly — involved instrumental reason Swiss banks and hidden aimed at achieving national accounts, German companies empire and mass annihilation. and slave labor, French localities Leaders and population plan- and apartments of the deported, ners in a modern state museums and stolen art. Memo- planned racial empire; citizens ry of the Holocaust casts dark stood by silently during eth- shadows on the rise of new lead- nic cleansing. ers and movements, like [Joerg] Architects planned the Haider in Austria, and a Euro- camps; engineers built them; pean Right that wishes to cleanse medical doctors staffed them; the continent of strangers. Holo- scientists performed experi- caust discourse guides Western ments. Legal experts oversaw reactions to ethnic conflicts in international transport; officers the former Yugoslavia. It is remarkable, actually — a Harold and Lucy Zuker of Oak Park light a candle at the led deportees to their deaths. The Nazis sought to reengineer global phenomenon. The Holo- state's Holocaust commemoration. the world not merely by chang- caust looms larger today in our ing human social organization preoccupations and consciousness and conquering nature, but by killing sciousness. We mark the civic calendar than it did after the war. The Holocaust, off humans whom they deemed ene- to commemorate the Holocaust. The for example, did not remain prominent mies. U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in the U.S. after liberation; it was side- The Allied governments had infor- stands since 1993 near the national mall lined by the Cold War and was not mation about the Nazi project by in Washington, D.C. Scores of smaller understood as a distinct racial war for a 1942, yet did little beyond issuing the museums and memorials dot the metro- generation. Efforts by Americans to declaration to publicize it and politan landscape, including our own build museums or memorials in the explored little how they might inter- Holocaust Memorial Center in West postwar era foundered for lack of sup- vene to save lives. Bloomfield. Books and films pour out port. Little appeared in books and film on the Holocaust and courses spring up about the Holocaust. Little also was said — after a brief moment of testimony — in colleges and high schools. Survivors REMEMBERING on page 48 Pho to by Fran klin J. Elias KENNETH WALTZER Special to the Jewish News LETTERS Local Rabbi Enhances Trip My wife Judy and I had the most extraordinary experience during the week of Dec. 13-21, traveling to Cuba with the Jewish Community Center mission ("Behind The Sugar Cane Curtain," March 3, page 45). Seeing Havana and rural areas of Cuba, and meeting a number of its people, was an exciting and enjoyable experience. But the real experience was being with our rabbi, Leonardo Bitran [of Congregation Shaarey Zedek B'nai Israel], who traveled with us as a member of the. group. We visited three separate Jewish congregations — Orthodox, Conservative and Sephardic — as well as a Presbyter- ian congregation, which provided assistance to us. We met and talked with a number of members of each. Rabbi Bitran was invited to deliver a sermon and to otherwise talk with the leaders and congregants at these institutions. These Jewish congregations had not seen a rabbi for many years. The Pres- byterian congregation apparently has never seen a rabbi. Rabbi Bitran's pres- ence — low key, dignified, very good humored — and his clear, intellectual- ly stimulating sermons and talks deliv- ered in both English and Spanish were electrifying. Each time, he held the congregations, including us, in the palm of his hand. In short, he "wowed" all of us. When he stood before a group, his presence filled the sanctuary or room. We, the members of our mission group, were so proud of our rabbi. He was also lots of fun as well as educational to be with during our travels and sightseeing. Bernard J. Cantor Troy Author's Work Is Well Noted I am delighted that the Jewish News featured mystery writer Rochelle Major Krich, Adat Shalom Synagogue Sisterhood's donor day speaker, several times in the past month. I applaud the Jewish News Arts & Entertainment section for highlighting Krich. In the article by Alice Burdick Schweiger ("In Search Of Justice," April 21, page 98), readers become acquainted with the themes of Krich's work as well as the person behind the words. Thank you for including Krich's review of the film Kadosh (April 28, page 105). Since her personal back- ground is similar to that of the main characters, her assessment of the film was most enlightening and credible. We are fortunate in metropolitan Detroit that the Jewish News, a uni- fying force within the Jewish com- munity, has chosen to present a diversity of views and perspectives about issues, causes and concerns within its pages. Carol Weintraub Fogel president, Adat Shalom Sisterhood Farmington Hills